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Jeffrey Foskett has sung and played guitar with the Beach Boys for more than 30 years. He recorded their last No. 1 hit, “Kokomo,” when Brian Wilson wasn’t with them. He was discovered by Beach Boys frontman Mike Love in 1979 when Love booked Foskett’s college surf band to open for his solo act. In 1981, Foskett was asked to join the Beach Boys’ touring band.
But when Wilson and Love went their separate ways in the late 1990s, after years of legal battles, Foskett followed Wilson. Some described Foskett as Wilson’s music director. Others called him his “right-hand man.”
Wilson said last month Paul Mertens was his music director and Foskett had been his right-hand man. “The right-hand man,” he told me, “helps you with the medication, watches you and makes sure (things get done).”
Foskett, 58, said last week, “However he viewed me is fine with me.
“A lot of it is semantics,” he said over the phone, “and that’s why I don’t really care how I’m viewed. As long as Brian knows that I love him and as long as Brian knows I had the time of my life working with him, I really don’t care about anything else.”
Something happened in the past year that Foskett really hasn’t wanted to talk about. When we last spoke in 2013, he was excited about working on an album with Wilson and British guitar great Jeff Beck, and going on tour with the two rock legends.
Then I read a real estate notice saying Foskett was selling his Rancho Mirage home. Suddenly, he wasn’t returning my phone calls or emails. Then it was announced he had left the Wilson band. Soon after that, it was announced he had joined Love’s Beach Boys. In August, Wilson said he had sold his Indian Wells home and the album with Beck would be released “not soon.”
So, what happened?
Foskett sent me an email two weeks ago saying things had been moving so fast since May, he simply forgot to reply.
Breaking the silence
“After the Jeff Beck tour, I was completely stressed and burned out,” he said. “That whole year, recording that album and that tour — because I knew Jeff so well — a lot of things fell on me to get done that normally would have been other people’s responsibilities. They asked me to do certain things and it was a lot of pressure. So, at the end of that tour, I kind of snapped — literally — and just said, ‘I can’t do this anymore.’ ”